INTL Joint statement from U.S., and more than 40 other countries, warning the Houthi against further attacks in the Red Sea Yemen Attacked Thurs. 1/11/24

Old Greek

Veteran Member
ft.com
The mysterious Iranian ship accused of lining up the next Houthi targets



A mysterious Iranian vessel in the Gulf of Aden faces intensifying scrutiny among maritime experts concerned that the ship is helping Houthi rebels target commercial sea traffic.

The Behshad, which outwardly looks like a standard dry bulk carrier, moved to the Gulf of Aden in January after years in the Red Sea, just as attacks on vessels surged in the vital waterway off Yemen.

It has since followed an unorthodox, slow and meandering course around those waters close to the entrance to the Red Sea. Experts also noted a drop in Houthi attacks during a period last month when the Behshad was seemingly out of action.

Jon Gahagan, president of maritime risk specialist Sedna Global, said that for a supposed cargo vessel, the behaviour of the Behshad, registered and flagged in Iran, was “extremely unusual”.

“It does ask major questions about her role in the current crisis,” he said of its movements and the links to the attacks. “If she isn’t providing the Houthi regime with intelligence on vessel movements, then just what is she doing?”

Concerns that the Behshad is involved in providing targeting information to the Houthis have heightened since an attack this week on the True Confidence, carrying steel and trucks from China to Saudi Arabia, killed three of the vessel’s crew. The fatalities were the first since the Houthis began attacking commercial shipping in November in response to Israel’s offensive in Gaza.

The Behshad was 43 nautical miles away when the True Confidence was struck. That attack followed six others in the Gulf of Aden or at the entrance to the Red Sea over just 15 days.

Experts also point to a lull in the frequency of Houthi attacks in February following a cyber attack on the Behshad reported by the US’s NBC News. Data from vessel tracking site MarineTraffic from around that time shows the ship spent more than two weeks away from its normal cruising area.

UK defence secretary Grant Shapps last month highlighted concerns about Iranian ships loitering off Yemen. “The whole world needs to carry on piling the pressure on Iran to cease and desist from this behaviour,” he told the House of Commons.

The Behshad is registered as an ordinary dry bulk carrier, and outwardly looks like any of the thousands of such vessels that ply the oceans.

But a video posted on an Iranian army-linked Telegram channel last month, in English, described the vessel as a “floating armoury” and insisted it had a role in combating piracy. The video, which did not address the contradiction between the Behshad’s presentation as a commercial ship and its strategic role, featured a warning against attacking it.

A voiceover accompanying images of both the Behshad and US aircraft carriers said: “Those engaging in terrorist attacks against the Behshad or similar vessels jeopardise international maritime routes, security and assume global responsibility for potential future international risks.”

The Houthis, who control much of Yemen, are one element of the Iran-linked Axis of Resistance that has come to the fore since the October 7 attack that sparked the Gaza war. Hamas, the militant group that carried out the assault on Israel, and Lebanon’s Hizbollah are also part of the same grouping. They share the same anti-Israel, anti-US ideology and say their actions are in support of the Palestinians.

US officials have accused Iran of providing “tactical intelligence” to the Houthis to support its attacks on shipping, and Washington and Gulf states have accused Iran of supplying the rebels with drones and missiles.

Iranian officials, who insist the militants they back are acting independently, have praised the Houthis’ attacks, but have rejected US claims that Tehran has been involved in the planning or supplied the group with weapons.

Yet maritime security experts have long commented on the close link between the Behshad and the Houthi attacks. After years nearly stationary in the Red Sea, the vessel sailed south on January 11 through the narrow Bab-el-Mandeb strait into the Gulf of Aden, information from MarineTraffic shows.

Immediately after the move, there was a string of attacks on vessels in that sea, south of Yemen. The Gulf of Aden’s greater size makes it harder to spot and target vessels there than in the far more constrained Red Sea.

The container ship Gibraltar Eagle was targeted on January 15, as was the Genco Picardy two days later, the Maersk Detroit on January 24 and the Marlin Luanda on January 26.

Gahagan pointed to the links between the Behshad’s movements and the attacks as implausible coincidences. “While I understand Tehran has continued to deny the vessel’s involvement in the current situation, it’s a difficult circle to square,” he said.

A period of relative calm in attacks followed the reported cyber attack on the Behshad. Between February 2 and 19, around the reported time of the incident, the Behshad sat off Djibouti, where China has a large naval base.

There were few effective attacks on ships during that period, and a sudden upsurge around the time that ship-tracking data shows it returning to the Gulf of Aden.

This included the February 18 attack on the Rubymar, which subsequently became the first to sink as a result of a Houthi strike. Two more ships were attacked the following day.

Gahagan said that if Iran gave weapons to the Houthis, the Behshad’s suspected role in spotting ships was not implausible. “Is it such a stretch to imagine they’re also supplying the Houthis with intelligence to support target profiling?” he asked.

Yet it remains unclear what action the US-led coalition trying to counter the Houthi threat to shipping is willing to take against the contentious vessel. The UK defence ministry did not immediately respond to a request to say what it planned to do about such ships.

Martin Kelly, senior Middle East analyst at maritime security practice EOS Risk Group, suggested Tehran would likely regard a physical — or kinetic — attack on the Behshad as crossing a “red line”. For this reason, it was hard to see how the threat could be immediately countered by the US and its allies.

“Whilst I’d like to see some kind of kinetic action against the Behshad, I’m not sure we’ll see that in the near term,” he said.

Additional reporting by John Paul Rathbone in London
Trump would probably sink the Behshad. Slow Joe will send more grift money!
 

jward

passin' thru
OSINTdefender
@sentdefender

U.S. Central Command has announced that in Response to a Failed Anti-Ship Ballistic Missile Attack by the Houthi Terrorist Group in Yemen against the Liberian-Flagged and Singaporean-Owned Cargo Ship, M/V Pinocchio in the Southern Red Sea earlier today; Airstrikes were launched tonight against at least 6 Houthi Positions in Western Yemen, with a One-Way Surface Drone and upwards of 18 Anti-Ship Missiles that are believed to have posed a Imminent Threat to Commercial Shipping in the Region being Destroyed.
 

jward

passin' thru
U.S. Central Command
@CENTCOM

March 11 Red Sea Update

Between 8:50 a.m. and 12:50 p.m. (Sanaa time) on March 11, Iranian-backed Houthi terrorists fired two anti-ship ballistic missiles from Houthi-controlled areas of into the Red Sea toward merchant vessel Pinocchio, a Singaporean-owned, Liberian-flagged ship. The missiles did not impact the vessel and there were no injuries or damage reported.

Between 2:50-11:30 p.m. (Sanaa time) on March 11, United States Central Command conducted six self-defense strikes destroying an unmanned underwater vessel and 18 anti-ship missiles in Houthi controlled areas of Yemen. It was determined these weapons presented an imminent threat to merchant vessels and U.S. Navy ships in the region. These actions are taken to protect freedom of navigation and make international waters safer and more secure for U.S. Navy and merchant vessels.
 

jward

passin' thru
OSINTdefender
@sentdefender
Russian State Media is claiming that the Houthi Terrorist Group in Western Yemen has conducted a Successful Test of a Hypersonic Missile with Speeds in excess of Mach 8 (6,200 Miles per Hour) which it plans to soon Introduce to its Weapon Arsenal for use during Attacks against Targets in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden as well as Israel; they further state that the Houthis have now also Completed any Overhaul of their Anti-Ship Missiles and One-Way “Suicide” Drones which will give them Double their previous Destructive Power.




 

blueinterceptor

Veteran Member

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment

jward

passin' thru
Jason Brodsky
@JasonMBrodsky

#BREAKING: @Telegraph reports #Iran is using European ports to provide cover for shipments of weapons to #Hezbollah. Worth noting Tehran has also smuggled precision missile components into #Syria via hand luggage on European passenger flights.

"Since the beginning of the Gaza war in October, five Iranian ships – Daisy, Kashan, Shiba, Arezoo and Azargoun – have unloaded goods in Syria, starting their journey in Bandar Abbas in Iran, according to intelligence handed to Mr. Solomon.

“Some ships like Daisy are also docked next to the Iranian spy ship Behshad which sits in the Red Sea and receives regular supplies unloaded in Egyptian and Libyan ports,” Mr Solomon added.
 

colonel holman

Veteran Member
Jason Brodsky
@JasonMBrodsky

#BREAKING: @Telegraph reports #Iran is using European ports to provide cover for shipments of weapons to #Hezbollah. Worth noting Tehran has also smuggled precision missile components into #Syria via hand luggage on European passenger flights.

"Since the beginning of the Gaza war in October, five Iranian ships – Daisy, Kashan, Shiba, Arezoo and Azargoun – have unloaded goods in Syria, starting their journey in Bandar Abbas in Iran, according to intelligence handed to Mr. Solomon.

“Some ships like Daisy are also docked next to the Iranian spy ship Behshad which sits in the Red Sea and receives regular supplies unloaded in Egyptian and Libyan ports,” Mr Solomon added.
the availability of worthy targets is certainly not an issue.
 

jward

passin' thru
Jason Brodsky
@JasonMBrodsky

Good letter from @SenDanSullivan to @POTUS
. "Tell #Iran that the next Houthi missile or drone launched at an American ship will result in the sinking of Iran’s spy ships that target our Navy. With all due respect, that this hasn’t already happened, with so many American lives on the line is the continuation of a clearly failed policy of appeasement." https://politico.com/live-updates/2

1710535439540.jpeg
 

jward

passin' thru
Indo-Pacific News - Geo-Politics & Defense News
@IndoPac_Info

If the #USNavy needs extra funding to restock missiles fired to protect ships attacked by the Houthis..... .....then they are NOT ready to take on #China

....which is not good for #Taiwan & the #Philippines Sorry, but those are the logical conclusions. As the Ukraine war has shown, in a high intensity conflict with a peer opponent, all types of munitions get used at an astronomical rate, and as it was reported last year, the US is likely to run out of some critical munitions within 1-2 weeks of a war with China.

So, that means that we see a lot of posturing, tough talk and a lot of sailing around showing the flag, but it's unlikely that we'll see more than that. China also has its share of issues with its military and a very bad economic situation right now, so we can hope that they won't engage in military adventures. https://twz.com/news-features/
View: https://twitter.com/IndoPac_Info/status/1768600860471505163?s=20
 

Old Greek

Veteran Member
well to be fair, as always, it's the ROE that hamstring the forces, and not the fighting folk actually on the front lines that are insisting on the gelding of the policies and peoples conducting business.
This is not directed at you - your reply is correct. - You mean the 44 -4 stars we have and the unknown number of woke admirals. 44 - 4 stars for one million troops vs. 12 for 12 million during WW2. Our military is DEI certified today.
 

jward

passin' thru
This is not directed at you - your reply is correct. - You mean the 44 -4 stars we have and the unknown number of woke admirals. 44 - 4 stars for one million troops vs. 12 for 12 million during WW2. Our military is DEI certified today.
I was as shocked and disgusted as you when first began to read them admitting and discussing their deliberate policy of promoting only those- to paraphrase- that shared "right thought" and who were mediocre and malleable enough to "fit in" the upper echelons o' the power trees.
Literally vomit inducing if you dwell on it overly long.
 

jward

passin' thru
OSINTdefender
@sentdefender

Earlier today, Forces with U.S. Central Command conducted their Largest Strike in the last several weeks against the Houthi Terrorist Group in Western Yemen, with 7 Anti-Ship Missiles, 3 One-Way “Suicide” Drones, and 3 Munitions Storage Sites being Destroyed as they were believed to present an Imminent Threat to Commercial Shipping and Coalition Navy Vessels in the Region.

7:59 PM · Mar 18, 2024
52.2K
Views
 

jward

passin' thru
OSINTdefender
@sentdefender

The Houthi Terrorist Groups in Yemen is claiming to have launched several Anti-Ship Missiles within the last few minutes at U.S. Navy Ships in the Southern Red Sea.

8:15 PM · Mar 18, 2024
75.9K
Views
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Ragıp Soylu
@ragipsoylu

A former member of the French special forces is seeking to create for the United Arab Emirates a new elite unit of at least 3,000 foreign recruits, based on the model of the French Foreign Legion.

Recruits to be deployed to Yemen and Somalia.

— Intelligence Online
View: https://twitter.com/ragipsoylu/status/1768719182663758220?s=20

Hummm....The prior model they used in Yemen against the Houthi where they were recruiting from Sudan and everywhere else in the region wasn't making it.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use......

March 18, 2024 11:37 PM

US Destroys Houthi Missiles, Drones in New Yemen Strike​

WASHINGTON —
The U.S. military said it destroyed seven missiles and three drones Monday in areas of Yemen controlled by Houthi rebels that presented threats to merchant ships and U.S. Navy vessels.

Iran-backed Houthis have been attacking ships in the Red Sea region since November in what they say is solidarity with Palestinians during Israel's war against Hamas militants in Gaza.

United States Central Command forces operated "in self defense" when they engaged and destroyed the anti-ship missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles, as well as three weapons storage containers in Houthi-controlled areas, CENTCOM said in a statement posted on X, the former Twitter.

"It was determined these weapons presented an imminent threat to merchant vessels and U.S. Navy ships in the region. These actions are taken to protect freedom of navigation and make international waters safer and more secure for U.S. Navy and merchant vessels," CENTCOM said.

The Houthi attacks have sent insurance costs spiraling for vessels plying the key Red Sea trade route and prompted many shipping firms to take the far longer passage around the southern tip of Africa instead.

The United States and Britain have launched repeated strikes on Houthi targets in Yemen in response but the attacks against what the rebels say are Israeli-linked ships have not been deterred.
 

jward

passin' thru
for some reason that makes me smile.

Sal Mercogliano (WGOW Shipping) ⚓☠️
@mercoglianos

So much for the #Houthi agreement not to shoot at Chinese ships.


Square profile picture
U.S. Central Command
@CENTCOM
MARCH 23 RED SEA UPDATE


From 2:50 to 4:30 a.m. (Sanaa time)
March 23, the Iranian-backed Houthis launched four anti-ship ballistic missiles (ASBM) into the Red Sea in the vicinity of M/V Huang Pu, a Panamanian-flagged, Chinese-owned, Chinese-operated oil tanker.

At 4:25 p.m. (Sanaa time), a fifth ballistic missile was detected as fired toward M/V Huang Pu. The ship issued a distress call but did not request assistance. M/V Huang Pu suffered minimal damage, and a fire on board was extinguished within 30 minutes. No casualties were reported, and the vessel resumed its course. The Houthis attacked the MV Huang despite previously stating they would not attack Chinese vessels.

Between 6:50 and 9:50 a.m. (Sanaa time), U.S. forces, including USS Carney (DDG 64), engaged six Houthi unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) over the southern Red Sea. Five crashed into the Red Sea, and one flew inland into Houthi-controlled areas of Yemen.

It was determined these UAVs presented an imminent threat to U.S., coalition, and merchant vessels in the region. These actions are taken to protect freedom of navigation and make international waters safer and more secure for U.S, coalition, and merchant vessels.
 

jward

passin' thru
EndGameWW3
@EndGameWW3

Two informed Yemeni sources: Prominent field commanders affiliated with the Houthi group and experts in the Iranian Revolutionary Guard held a secret meeting in Hodeidah Governorate, western Yemen.


EndGameWW3
@EndGameWW3

Two informed Yemeni sources: The meeting discussed a military escalation plan that Tehran intends to implement in the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden.
 

jward

passin' thru
U.S. Central Command
@CENTCOM

March 27 Red Sea Update

TAMPA, Fla. - Between 2:00 and 2:20 a.m. (Sanaa time) on March 27, United States Central Command successfully engaged and destroyed four long-range unmanned aerial systems (UAS) launched by Iranian-backed Houthi terrorists in Yemen. These UAS were aimed at a U.S. warship and engaged in self-defense over the Red Sea. There were no injuries or damage reported to U.S. or coalition ships.

It was determined these weapons presented an imminent threat to merchant vessels and U.S. Navy ships in the region. These actions are taken to protect freedom of navigation and make international waters safer and more secure for U.S. Navy and merchant vessels.
 

jward

passin' thru
Iran International English
@IranIntl_En

“We’re at a point where Iran has influence over, if not strategic control over, three of world’s six major economic choke points,” former @US5thFleet
commander John Miller told Bloomberg, referring to the Suez Canal at the north of the Red Sea, the Bab el-Mandeb strait in the south, and the Strait of Hormuz.

8:56 AM · Mar 27, 2024
7,366
Views
 

jward

passin' thru
Insider Paper
@TheInsiderPaper

NEW: Russia says several of its warships have entered Red Sea amid Houthi attacks — TASS

3:23 PM · Mar 28, 2024
36.7K
Views



Insider Paper
@TheInsiderPaper

UPDATES: The detachment included the missile cruiser Varyag and frigate Marshal Shaposhnikov, Tass reported Thursday, citing the Russian Pacific Fleet’s press service, which said the ships were carrying out “assigned tasks within the framework of the long-range sea campaign.” The ultimate destination of the ships was unclear from the report, as was
the reason Russia sent vessels to the area — Bloomberg

3:36 PM · Mar 28, 2024
8,644
Views



:hmm:

Valentina Gomez
@ValentinaForSOS

Well WW3 is getting started. Positions in the sea are taking place

3:24 PM · Mar 28, 2024
1,615
Views
 

jward

passin' thru
Biden Admin Considers Not Calling Terrorists 'Terrorists' If They Stop Shooting Rockets At Ships


The Biden administration is considering removing a designation label from an Islamic terrorist group in a bid to solve current Middle Eastern conflicts through diplomatic means, Bloomberg reported on Wednesday.

The Houthis, an Iranian-backed and Yemini-based terrorist organization, have launched a series of missile and drone attacks against commercial shipping liners and U.S. and coalition forces in the Red Sea in recent months out of support for Hamas, another terrorist group currently at war with Israel. Though the Houthis are currently listed on the U.S. Specially Designated Global Terrorist (SDGT) list, the Biden administration would consider removing the Houthis from the list if the group halted its attacks in the region, according to Bloomberg. (RELATED: Biden Admin Scrambles To Tell Tehran It Had ‘No Involvement’ On Israeli Strike Against Iranian Generals: REPORT)

“My hope is that we can find diplomatic off-ramps,” Tim Lenderking, the Biden administration’s special envoy for Yemen, told reporters during a press briefing on Wednesday. “To find ways to deescalate and allow us to pull back, eventually, the designation and of course to end the military strikes on Houthis’ military capability.”

The Biden administration has flip-flopped on its view of the Houthis during President Joe Biden’s tenure. The Houthis were removed from U.S. terrorist designation lists shortly after Biden took office in 2021, citing concerns over what humanitarian impacts it might have on Yemen.

(Photo by MOHAMMED HUWAIS/AFP via Getty Images)

Armed supporters of Yemen’s Huthi rebels attend a rally in solidarity with the Palestinian Hamas movement’s armed resistance against Israel in the capital Sanaa on January 29, 2024, amid the continuing battles between Israeli forces and Hamas in Gaza. (Photo by MOHAMMED HUWAIS/AFP via Getty Images)

INTERNATIONAL WATERS RED SEA, YEMEN – NOVEMBER 20: This handout screen grab captured from a video shows Yemen’s Houthi fighters’ takeover of the Galaxy Leader Cargo in the Red Sea coast off Hudaydah, on November 20, 2023 in the Red Sea, Yemen. On Monday, the Houthi movement in Yemen released footage and photos of the Houthi-run coastguard taking over the Israeli-linked Galaxy Leader Vessel in the Red Sea, which had 52 people onboard. Galaxy Leader is owned by Galaxy Maritime Ltd in the Isle of Man and is linked to Israeli businessman Abraham Ungar through Ray Car Carriers. (Photo by Houthi Movement via Getty Images)

The Biden administration returned the Houthis to the SDGT list in January following a spate of attacks against Western vessels in the Red Sea. They were not, however, relisted to the Designated Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO).

Lenderking’s remarks on Wednesday that the Biden administration may remove the Houthis SDGT list once again represents a potential approach to ending conflict with the Houthi terrorists through diplomacy. The Biden administration has admitted that its efforts to take a defensive military position in the Red Sea haven’t worked nor stopped the Houthis attacks.

Yemeni soldiers stand on their position on a mountain on the frontline of fighting with Houthis in Nihem area, near Sanaa, Yemen January 27, 2018. Picture taken January 27, 2018. REUTERS/Faisal Al Nasser

Yemeni soldiers stand on their position on a mountain on the frontline of fighting with Houthis in Nihem area, near Sanaa, Yemen January 27, 2018. Picture taken January 27, 2018. REUTERS/Faisal Al Nasser

The Houthis did not cease their attacks even as several Iranian-backed terrorist groups in the Middle East did at the behest of Tehran. Even though the Houthis receive funding, equipment and intelligence from Iran, the terrorist group operates more independently than the rest of the country’s terror proxy network.

“We would certainly study that but not assume it’s an automatic thing,” Lenderking told Bloomberg in response to a question as to whether the Biden administration is offering the Houthis a “quid pro quo” to halt the Red Sea attacks in exchange for being delisted from the SDGT.

The State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

 

jward

passin' thru
Russia’s War on Ukraine
Jeff Seldin
@jseldin
Renewed flare up in the #RedSea

USS Gravely & other @CENTCOM
forces shot down an anti-ship ballistic missile & 2 drones launched by #Iran-back #Houthis in #Yemen April 3

US also destroyed a Houthi mobile surface-to-air missile system

"These systems presented a threat..."
 

jward

passin' thru
Ian Ellis
@ianellisjones

Iranian spy ship & forward base, M/V BEHSHAD, has been running dark on AIS for 48+ hours. BEHSHAD also disappeared in early February prior to retaliatory U.S strikes—& soon after was the target of a U.S. cyberattack.

John explains: “The Behshad’s departure from its normal areas of operation is significant. In the past, Iran has taken the Behshad off-station to mitigate the risk of U.S. & Israeli retaliation against the vessel as a response to past Iranian strike.”
@DefenseBulletin @MT_Anderson @sentdefender @Schizointel @OSINTNW

View: https://twitter.com/ianellisjones/status/1776823092632785370



Rob Spayne
@SpayneRob

Tough to accept America waiting, scared, to be hit by Iran. It’s upside down.

11:08 PM · Apr 6, 2024
354
Views
 

jward

passin' thru
Clash Report
@clashreport
Yemen's Houthis say 90 Israeli, US and British ships had been targeted in the Red Sea, the Arabian Sea and the Indian Ocean since November.

In just one month, the operations reached 34, carried out with 125 ballistic and winged missiles and drones.
 

jward

passin' thru
Two vessels targeted southwest of Yemen's Aden
By REUTERS
~4 minutes
APRIL 7, 2024 09:16
Updated: APRIL 7, 2024 11:18

A protester carries a mock drone as demonstrators, predominantly Houthi supporters, rally to show support to the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in Sanaa, Yemen February 16, 2024. (photo credit: KHALED ABDULLAH/REUTERS)
A protester carries a mock drone as demonstrators, predominantly Houthi supporters, rally to show support to the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in Sanaa, Yemen February 16, 2024.
(photo credit: KHALED ABDULLAH/REUTERS)

British security firm Ambrey said it had received information indicating that a vessel was attacked on Sunday in the Gulf of Aden about 102 nautical miles southwest of Mukalla in Yemen.

"Vessels in the vicinity were advised to exercise caution and report any suspicious activity," the firm said. It did not say who was responsible for the attack or give further details.

Separately, a missile landed near a vessel in the Gulf of Aden on Sunday but there was no damage to the ship or injuries to crew in the incident, 59 nautical miles southwest of the Yemeni port of Aden, the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) agency said.

"The Master of the vessel reports a missile impacted the water in close proximity to the vessel’s port quarter," UKMTO said in an advisory note. "No damage to the vessel reported and crew reported safe," it added.

It did not say who fired the missile or give further details.
A child holds a pistol as demonstrators, predominantly Houthi supporters, rally to show support to the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, February 16, 2024 (credit: KHALED ABDULLAH/REUTERS)
The latest in a months-long campaign of attacks

The Houthis, which have been at war with Yemen's internationally recognized government for a decade, launched a campaign of attacks on merchant ships following the outbreak of war when Hamas attacked Israel on October 7.

Throughout the campaign, which has included drone and missile attacks as well as hijackings and hostage-taking, the Houthis have killed three sailors, one of whom was Vietnamese and the other two Filipino, and wounded eleven more, six of whom were Egyptian and five of whom were Filipino.

The United States, United Kingdom, and allies launched a military campaign, dubbed Operation Prosperity Guardian, in December 2023 to protect shipping in the Red Sea. In addition to patrolling the region and intercepting aerial attacks, the coalition has launched retaliatory strikes on Houthi targets inside of Yemen. Two vessels targeted southwest of Yemen's Aden
 

jward

passin' thru
Omar Abu Layla
@OALD24



The Houthi militias have claimed responsibility for a military operation targeting the American vessel (MAERSK YORKTOWN) in the Gulf of Aden with naval missiles.

The resurgence of #Houthi militias was long expected, and among their main objectives is to alleviate pressure on #Hezbollah.

2:56 PM · Apr 24, 2024
4,644
Views
 
Top